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The Workplace: Creating an Optimal Health Plan for Employees Across States
THE STAND-UP //
The Workplace
Out of State, but Not out of Mind
Creating the optimal health plan for satellite employees may require some nuance
Employer-provided health coverage is a vital facet of overall business success. According to a 2021 workplace wellness survey from the Employee Benefit Research Institute, nearly 9 in 10 of the nation’s workers who were offered health insurance received that coverage through their jobs. What’s more, over two-thirds of this population is confident in its ability to make informed healthcare decisions.
Health benefits are no less crucial in the middle market, note industry experts interviewed by Middle Market Executive. Yet improving employee well-being means understanding the permutations of insurance, including the minutiae that encompass moving an organization across state lines.
While the insurance industry is beholden to federal guidelines, state regulatory control may require additional due diligence when developing the ideal plan for all employees. Midmarket firms with operations in one state can protect their workers under a group program and then find further coverage for employees who travel on a regular basis.
For example, a preferred provider organization (PPO) plan with a national network ensures personnel have access to in-network care throughout their travels, notes Dena Allchin, director of large group sales at Word & Brown, a California insurance agency.
“If a company has an HMO (health maintenance organization) product based in California, those benefits are available for emergency services when traveling,” says Allchin. “But you couldn’t go to a primary care physician in Nevada for a wellness check.”
Companies with large operations in multiple states should be covered under the same policy as their corporate location, Allchin adds. Obstacles arise when a business expands into new territories with a smaller satellite office, as most medical insurance entities don’t offer location carve-outs and will issue only one main policy. Affected companies can work with their insurance plan’s assigned account manager to move their current rate and networks to the satellite location.
Partnering with a broker or agency can help cut through the regulatory thicket presented from state to state—in California, for instance, 51% of employees must live in-state for a provider to issue a California small group policy. (In the Golden State, a small group is defined as fewer than 100 employees.)
THE STAND-UP //
The Workplace
“Each medical carrier is going to have individual underwriting requirements by state,” Allchin says. “Do all policies provide the same level of care as a company’s core policy? Some employers will have a plan saying you have to travel 30 miles to go to a primary care physician, where another carrier might have greater access to care. The challenge there is knowing what’s available to you when marketing employee benefits.”
Making a Confident Healthcare Decision
Designing a benefit structure for outof-state staff should begin with a clear understanding of where your satellite employees live, says Patty Starr, president and CEO of the Health Action Council, a not-for-profit headquartered in Cleveland.
Her organization recently published a report that pointed to community health outcomes as a factor to consider when forming an outof-state healthcare plan. Knowing location-centric indicators such as life expectancy, preventive service availability and care-match patient goals can translate into improved outcomes for your organization.
Societal determinants—health literacy, addictive behavior, obesity prevalence and others—supply further data for mid-market firms to build an optimal plan. Knowing Houston’s poor health literacy rates compared to those of major metropolitan areas in the Midwest can aid organizations in meeting employee healthcare goals, according to one example cited by the report.
“The more centrally located your employees, the narrower your plan can be,” says Starr. “But if you have employees in a different state, you’ll want to look at what the needs are of that population and find a benefit design and carrier that will support it. You want to have a network of doctors and providers that will serve that region.”
Tapping a national carrier—or a regional carrier that has a relationship with a national company—should result in little interruption or confusion around company-wide health services, says Starr. Alongside differences in population health, employers should study variations in provider billing patterns. Magnetic resonance imaging on a knee, for instance, may differ in billing costs by as much as five times depending on the region.
“Some employers might be hit out of pocket quicker due to those differences,” says Starr. “The amount an employee is responsible for if they’re paying a claim in a self-insured space can vary significantly by location as well.”
Self-insured plans have become increasingly popular, as they give employers greater control of plan design than they have when using a fully insured product, says Greg Hubbell, senior vice president of the Cleveland office of Aon Risk Services. In a self-insured environment, all of a company’s employees typically have the same deductible and copay, no matter where in the country they are located.
“Most employers in the middlemarket space follow that game plan,” Hubbell says. “Some may be fully insured, and in that case, there could be some subtle differences from state to state, because the insurance company takes the risk and is beholden to state insurance departments.”
Companies extending their reach across state lines should ask themselves if their current carrier offers a competitive plan within supporting provider networks. With pandemic-prompted talent shortages still affecting the marketplace, midmarket companies can use a strong health program as an employee recruitment and retention tool, says Allchin of Word & Brown.
“A solid benefit plan is a key component of the complete financial offering in bringing in and keeping talented individuals,” she says. “Companies knowing what resources they have available when expanding nationally helps them make a confident (healthcare plan) decision.” //
DENA ALLCHIN
Director of Large Group Sales, Word & Brown
DOUGLAS J. GUTH is a Clevelandbased freelance writer covering the middle market and small business.
Look Below the Surface of Post-Merger Integration: It Takes Balance
Co-Written by: Amy Moore and Michael Pelletier, Principals at CLA
In the current M&A environment, a deal thesis should clearly define the value creation principles of the transaction. It’s not just people, processes, and technology that are integral to achieving valuable postclose results, so are data, applications, and infrastructure. Review some key post-merger integration strategies to help you prepare for what may lie below the surface.
Tactical close steps Depending on the scope and scale of each transaction, tactical financial steps can vary greatly during close. Whether you’re verifying key employees, defining a Day 1 organization structure, or planning for tax matters, answering some strategic questions can help you avoid pitfalls.
• How does the newly acquired entity appear to the outside world? • Should the acquired organization get new email addresses? • Do their computers and systems comply with your standard security practices, and are they in alignment with your insurance carrier’s expectations? • How can data be shared effectively and securely so teams can collaborate on go-to-market activities?
Financial integration and new reporting requirements Establish a Day 1 plan to address the continuation of day-to-day reporting, the technical recording of the transaction, and management information generated during due diligence — especially if these processes are being done manually.
Incorporating automated data collection practices into existing financial close processes can offer insight into the performance of the newly acquired business well before a full-scale system integration is completed. In fact, depending on the broader acquisition strategy, a master data management approach could be implemented. This would provide a longer runway to system consolidation while acquisitions take place — reducing investment in one-off integrations.
Operation integration Sales, marketing, HR, and IT are sometimes the hardest hit when it comes to loss of productivity, inability to execute, and delays in realizing post-transaction value. Consider core items in each department, even for something as simple as the ability to check free/busy time to schedule a meeting. Your people should have access to the technology and processes they need to perform their job responsibilities so operations can continue as normal — from Day 1 to Day 90, and beyond.
Capturing value How many file-sharing systems do you have? How many web meeting platforms are you paying for? Are the service contracts for employee laptops current? Can you use digital transformation initiatives to drive value creation? Having a long-term technology strategy can provide basic cost savings through resource, process, and technology sharing. Whether it is value creation, capture, or extraction, a clear vision — regularly communicated and measured — is essential.
With the right advisor at your side before, during, and after a transaction, you can anticipate and navigate the bumps.
For help with your post-close transaction strategies, contact Amy Moore at amy.moore@CLAconnect.com or 781-402-6346.
The information contained herein is general in nature and is not intended, and should not be construed, as legal, accounting, investment, or tax advice or opinion provided by CliftonLarsonAllen LLP (CliftonLarsonAllen) to the reader. For more information, visit CLAconnect.com.